I question things which people take for granted. I would have been that kid who said the emperor was naked. In real life that kid would probably have been lynched, but I'll take my chances...
I believe truth inherently valuable, no matter how well intentioned the ideology it dispels may be.
I also write about random interesting things from my personal life.

24 March 2008

Look carefully

Wait, actually go up and watch the video before you read the following
text.
Let it buffer fully before you begin it, you don't want it pausing in the middle.

No, really.

Otherwise you’ll ruin it. It’s really short, honest.
Go back and watch, and once it's done, then scroll down here and read the rest of this post...
I'll wait...

OK. I’m going to bet you missed it.
Everyone does.

You’d think something so out of the ordinary would stand out, right?

Their point is that when you are driving you are expecting cars, not bikes, and
that you need to be consciously aware of the possibility of bikes, so that you
don’t run into them.

I’ve seen this demonstration before, on TV.
In addition they had a person go up to a receptionist. The receptionist said
they had to get some papers from under the desk, and when they stood up again,
it was a different person.

Sometimes a twin in different clothes, sometimes someone who looked different
but in the same clothes.

No one noticed that either.

In addition to reacting to things you don’t notice (like a bike in the street)

This has serious implications for the justice system.

Certainly something like a crime in progress would be a suitable distraction
from seeing all the details. Yet the most valued evidence is eye witness
testimony.

If there is gunfire and shouting and confusion going on, one of the robbers
could be a moonwalking bear, and we might not notice.

Consider the simple optical illusion - usually nothing more than a way to amuse
grade schoolers, but it has similar implications about our minds.

The Ancient Greeks were aware of this. When they built the Parthenon, they
built it deliberately imperfect - they curved the floor and other lines a tiny
bit; exactly enough to compensate for the optical illusion that makes a
perpendicular line among a row of straight lines appear curved. So from a
distance it appears perfect, but only because of the flaws of human
perception.

But even more, consider your own mind and perception.

We usually look at this academically, "people" are like that.
"People" have unreliable memories, faulty perception, fail to notice
certain details. No, its not just people. Its you. You, reading this right now.
Its me. Its individuals, and no one is exempt.

Which begs the question, how sure are you of... well, anything, really? How do
you know it’s true?
Of course drugs and insanity and religion make people "know" things
which are really not true, but how much of what you remember really happened,
or happened exactly the way you think it did?